History & Culture · Southern Tier
Horseheads Keeps a Hard March in Its Name
Horseheads' unusual name carries a difficult Revolutionary-era military story behind it.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Horseheads has a name that asks to be explained carefully. The story is tied to the 1779 Sullivan Expedition, also known as the Clinton-Sullivan Campaign, and to the Battle of Newtown near present-day Elmira. That gives the place a memory that is memorable without being cute.
Horseheads is a Chemung County community whose name carries a hard military episode, not a branding gimmick. Local history can be distinctive and uncomfortable at the same time.
The key date is September 24, 1779, when exhausted military pack horses were left in the valley after a long march. Later accounts connect the skulls along the trail to the name “The Valley of Horses Heads,” which eventually became Horseheads.
Knowing the origin does not make the town gloomy. It makes the name less random and more respectful. Chemung County has several layers of military, Native, settlement, and valley history, and Horseheads keeps one of those layers in plain sight every time someone says the name.
That everyday use is part of the point. The story is not confined to a museum label; it rides along with the school name, the village sign, the town map, and ordinary directions. Horseheads is a normal Southern Tier community with an unusual memory built into its front door.